T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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304.1 | Why Must He Choose? | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Tue Nov 08 1988 19:13 | 18 |
| I would guess that the women said the man would take the woman over
the kids.
I would like to ask why the guy would have to make any choice.
Why can he not have a full involvement with his children and still
have the woman, if that is what he chooses.
Before I go any further, I am a firm believer in the institution
of marriage being until death do us part. However, if for some
reason the marriage should break up, the father should not have
to make such an unfair and difficult choice.
I have never understood the courts setting of visitation as every
other weekend and specified holidays. This would seem to relegate
the father to an after thought.
Ed..
|
304.2 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Ad Astra | Tue Nov 08 1988 20:08 | 10 |
| Questions like this bother me, because they make all sorts of
assumptions that almost never occur in real life. Though I'm not
qualified to answer (I'm a father, but not married), I doubt I could
even answer the question if I were married - it's just too absurd.
What are we supposed to imagine - an alien lands in our front yard
and tells me that it will kidnap either my wife or my son, and I'll
never see them again? Sorry, too silly to be able to answer plausibly.
Steve
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304.3 | What choice do I have? | CLT::BROWN | upcountry frolics | Wed Nov 09 1988 09:27 | 11 |
|
Not being a father, I can't really give you a realistic answer...
As to the question, I don't think it's silly. Reading "Sophie's
Choice" gave me a whole new way of looking at the word "choice."
Life is full of restricted or forced choices - although a good
salary and a roof over the head offers a bit of protection. If
you're out on the streets with empty pockets and an empty stomach,
be prepared for the hard choices.
Ron (just being curmudgeonly while I mourn my Liberal agenda)
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304.4 | Not what I asked them | DSSDEV::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life. | Wed Nov 09 1988 10:05 | 24 |
|
> I would guess that the women said the man would take the woman over
> the kids.
No, this isn't what I asked. I asked the women that if _they_ had to
choose, which would they choose. I also know what my immediate response
was.
I was just curious. I have no hidden agenda here.
There is a movie out now called "Good Mother" that depicts a situation
where a woman had to make such a choice: her kid or her lover. She
chose her kid, but ended up losing both. (I can't recommend the
movie. Diane Keaton gives a great performance, but I didn't think the
movie was very good.) I agree that "Sophie's Choice" is another good
example of having to make a crummy choice in a crummy situation. It
_can_ happen.
What is surprising me is that the men in this conference are refusing
to answer and that the two women I asked answered me without skipping
a heartbeat, saying that the choice was "clear." Interesting.
--Gerry
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304.5 | Spelling lessons needed | DSSDEV::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life. | Wed Nov 09 1988 10:08 | 6 |
|
I have some kind of mental block about spelling "choose" and "chose."
Sorry! :-)
--Ger
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304.6 | Another way of looking at it... | CLT::BROWN | upcountry frolics | Wed Nov 09 1988 10:11 | 9 |
|
Gerry,
Now that I think of it, I've already made my choice in advance.
No kids. (Except for the four-footed furry variety.)
Guess it's clearer than I thought!
Ron
|
304.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Ad Astra | Wed Nov 09 1988 10:33 | 8 |
| I can't answer because my son is all I have. If you had asked me
while I was married, I would not have been able to decide. Both
my child and my wife were important to me - any answer I gave to
an abstract question like this would be meaningless.
I haven't seen the movie you mention, so I can't comment on that.
Steve
|
304.8 | No problem, the children\ | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Wed Nov 09 1988 10:45 | 24 |
| I would chose the children. I would also want my wife to chose
the children. I would chose my wife's life to mine.
To all of you who ask, "How could this happen?" Very simple.
Childbirth . No, it is very rare these days, but in days gone by
it was a possibility. There could be emergency situations where
this could happen. Fire in the house, etc.
My wife and I have talked about this (yes, it's a morbid thought
and one we haven't talked about but once) when she was pregnant
with our first child. She told me that if it's between her and
the baby, the baby comes first. We talked about it and agreed that
if we were ever in a situation where the choice had to be made,
the kids would be first without hesitation.
If something happened to my wife and someone I was seeing wanted
to me to chose between her and my kids, my reaction would be to
tell them to not tlet the door hit them in the *ss on the way out.
God willing, noone will ever be put in this situation.
Mike
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304.9 | Was I Deficient? | FDCV03::ROSS | | Wed Nov 09 1988 10:47 | 15 |
| Gerry, this is not a direct response to your question, but it
reminded me of something my parents used to say to me:
"You know, Alan, we would give up our lives for you".
I truly believe they meant it. They are (well, my father just
died) that devoted to my sister and me.
When my own kids were born, I used to think of their remark and
wondered why I couldn't say the same thing.
It made me feel guilty. That somehow I wasn't as good a parent
to my kids as mine were to me.
Alan
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304.10 | ? | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Wed Nov 09 1988 10:55 | 2 |
| By the way gerry, what did the women say?
|
304.11 | I mean Gerry | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Wed Nov 09 1988 12:20 | 3 |
| Sorry Gerry, my shift key finger was not fast enough.
Mike
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304.12 | What about adult children? | NBC::MORIN | life gets better and better | Wed Nov 09 1988 12:21 | 31 |
| Interesting question!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
If the children were young, still dependant, there is no doubt,
I would choose the children. I would hope that I would not love
some man that would ask me to make that choice.
I love my children, who are all young adults, but if they decided
that they did not like the man I am involved with and put pressure
on me to terminate that relationship, I now would choose my man.
Thank heaven they do like him, for he is a good man. They are happy
that I am happy with him and that he treats me well.
What would you folks do if your child, as a young adult, put conditions
on your relationship with them? Such as "I'll see you/talk to you
only if you do not bring up "her". I'll never agree to meet "HER"
or will I ever go to the home you have with "HER" even if she agrees
to leave the house for that visit?
Now assume that "HER" is the woman you love. Met after the marrage
you had broke up, and you are very happy with this woman.
I'm asking this because I know someone that this is happening to.
What would you, male or female, do about such a situation?
Wondering!!!!!!!
Suzanne
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304.13 | choose the kids | BPOV04::MACKINNON | | Wed Nov 09 1988 12:30 | 17 |
|
I think that most women would choose the kids because they
feel a responsibility for them. Most adults can provide for
themselves. Whereas children depend on adults to provide
for them both financially and emotionally. The majority of
mothers would never give up their kids which is what you are
asking.
Now on the other hand, my boyfriend is a non-custodial parent
of a two year old girl. I know that if he had to choose between
us it would be her. We have been in a relationship for over
three years which is very strong. We love each other very much,
but his responsibility is towards his daughter not me.
So I think if you ask a parent of course they are going to say
their kids not their lovers.
|
304.14 | The Hypothetical Answer | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Nov 09 1988 13:09 | 15 |
| Other than a birth complication,(I would choose my wife)
why would there ever be a need to make a choice ?
The hyporthetical questions usually get hyporthetical answers,
which can't be used as a guide to life.
If you want something to ponder, have your spouse and yourself
write a letter to each other based on the question:
"What would My Life Be Without You"?
Allow thirty minutes to write the letters then swap the letters
and then share your feelings.
Those who have been to Marriage Encounter will be familiar with
this.
Peace
Jim
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304.15 | OOOps | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Nov 09 1988 13:11 | 3 |
| P.S. the previous note can be used by non- married couples also.
|
304.16 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Election 88: America Wins! | Wed Nov 09 1988 13:12 | 10 |
| I could not pick between my wife and my son. Could not. Period.
The amount of pressure it would take would very likely kill me
first.
If something should happen to my wife and some future woman should
ask me to pick between her and my son I would pick my son. Obviously
a woman who what ask me that could not love me and I would be better
off without them.
Alfred
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304.17 | | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Wed Nov 09 1988 13:24 | 23 |
| I think that if my children were to put conditions on seeing/talking
with me, I would have to, very painfully, tell them that when they
have resolved their feelings to come around again. I do not have
any children, nor have I ever been married, so I can't fully comprehend
how difficult this would be.
Any children who truly love their parent, I would hope, would never
put an ultimatum such as that mentioned earlier.
I did not think of the burning house scenario. Interesting situation.
I think my first thought would be the children if I did not know
the status of my wife. However, if I saw my wife on the floor,
I would possibly pull her out and then go back for the children.
If they were all pretty close together, maybe the children would
come first because I could handle more than one per trip.
As mentioned earlier, this is a very difficult scenario to speculate
on. I think we all would hope that in times of crisis we would
be strong. However, until we are each tested, I doubt that we would
ever really know what we would do.
Ed..
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304.18 | Hmmmm | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Wed Nov 09 1988 14:13 | 10 |
| RE: Ed, you are quite right. Until we are in such a situation we
don't know how we would react.
It's funny. I did not think of a scenario of my wife and I
getting divorced or my kids telling me to decide between my wife
or new girlfriend, etc. Don't even want to think about it either.
I could never see something like this happening to my family although
I know it happens quite often.
Mike
|
304.19 | wait a minute | BPOV04::MACKINNON | | Wed Nov 09 1988 14:23 | 20 |
|
re. 17
I could easily see kids putting pressure on parents to choose
between them and the other person. I grew up in a single
parent household because my father passed away. When I was
a teenager, I had a real tough time with my mom dating other
men. I felt she was betraying my father. This feeling was
shared by my brothers also. We saw the men as threats to our
family. We felt that if she did fall in love with him that
they would marry and we the kids would be left out of it all.
Now this was many years ago. I am older now and realize that
we were wrong for not thinking of our mothers happiness. But
when you are that age you really don't think of anyone but yourself.
We loved our mom then and we love her now. So I know that kids
who love their parents can and sometimes do put pressure on that
parent to make a choice. It all depends on the situation.
I am sure this scenerio has also been played out in divorce
situations as well.
|
304.20 | | LEVEL::MODICA | | Wed Nov 09 1988 15:29 | 6 |
|
I tend to agree with Jim. If there was a birth complication
I'd choose my wife. Otherwise it really is a terrifying question
(for me) to consider.
Hank
|
304.21 | | DARTS::PELKEY | Head for the Mountains, Bush is pres | Wed Nov 09 1988 15:39 | 4 |
|
Can't even answer this one. Not for lack of trying.
|
304.22 | All Things Considered... | SLOVAX::HASLAM | Creativity Unlimited | Fri Nov 11 1988 15:43 | 12 |
| I've been in this situation in my current marriage, and, since the
children are young, I chose the children. I brought
them into the world, and I feel responsible for maintaing at least
a modicum of stability, caring, and a loving home for them. That does
NOT mean it doesn't hurt to feel forced to make a choice, but in the
long run, my husband could survive alone and make choices about his life.
My children wouldn't be allowed too; therefore, while they are too young
to choose, my children come first. If the children were out on
their own, I wouldn't need to worry about it. I would do what I
wanted.
Barb
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304.23 | What they answered | DSSDEV::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life. | Fri Nov 11 1988 19:34 | 21 |
|
My women friends answered that they would choose their children. What
alarmed me is that they indicated that it was a clear choice, that
they didn't have to think about it very much. The speed of their
answer and the clarity of it for them was what startled me, especially
since I answered in my head "I'd choose my lover." (I think that my
answer is colored by the fact that I am a gay man; it has been a long
time since the concept of "kids" was important in my life, never mind
real children.)
After talking for a bit, the women mentioned the blood bond with the
children as being something that could never be broken whereas a love
for a partner can go bad. They also mentioned that the kids needed
them more as dependents and that their partners could survive without
them.
But all that was rational. What stays with me was the gut-reaction
and the initial speed of the answer. "Hands down! The kids."
--Gerry
|
304.24 | thoughts | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | Nothing But Flowers | Wed Nov 16 1988 17:13 | 40 |
| When my daughter was a baby and I was still married to my ex-husband
(and still in love) there was a period of time when I still would
have picked my ex-husband. I'm not sure exactly when it happened
but by the time my daughter was, maybe 1 1/2 yrs., she would have
come first. (Even though I still loved my ex at that time.)
Now that I'm divorced my daughter comes first and she always will.
I want her to know that whatever happens in her life, or my life
that as long as I'm alive, she is the number one person in my life.
Lovers and husbands can come and go but Melissa will always be
my daughter.
I know that my boyfriend's boys by his ex would come first with
him, too. I just accept the fact that once people get divorced,
and have kids by their ex's, and new lovers, that the bottom line
is - the kids come first. In a way it's sad, though, because I
realize that the way it was when I was dating my ex and we were
both young and single with no children and put each other first
is something that will never be again.
I have always been somewhat jealous of the fact that although my
parents loved me and my brother, they always put each other first.
They were in love for 37 years until my father died, and they always
put each other first, and us second. Sometimes I wonder if I don't
feel cheated deep down because I didn't find this same type of
relationship. I can remember my mother telling me once when I was
a teenager and had been fighting with my father a lot, "Don't ever
make me choose between you and your father, because I'll choose
him. He comes first with me."
But, even though I sometimes wish I came first with whatever man
is in my life, I realize that it's not really fair to expect it
because since my marriage got bad, my daughter comes first with
me.
But, as far as birth complications go, I would choose *myself* before
an unborn child I didn't even know yet!
Lorna
|
304.25 | Not a fair choice | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Wed Nov 16 1988 17:25 | 11 |
| When my parents were divorced, my father supposedly told my mother
that he would not leave if she "gave up" the kids. We are a large
family - 6 children. I found that comment rather disconcerting
at the time. After these comments, I understand that my mother
placed the children first and her husband second. This is not to
say that she did not love him. The level of her hurt over the divorce
(10 years ago) shows me she cared very deeply. This is also not
to say that there were not other problems. This was just one.
Ed..
|
304.26 | True Story | RUTLND::KUPTON | The Office Time Forgot | Thu Nov 17 1988 08:52 | 32 |
| I have personal knowledge of a situation where the mother of a family
(12 year old girl, 10 year old boy) decided that she no longer loved
her husband. Some of the things that he did was force her to move
to a new house because it was more prestegious, better location,
etc. He is a tremendous skier and spends most of his free time on
the slopes in the winter while she & kids stayed home. He did however
spend more time with the kids than she. She is in New Orleans at
least once a month for 3-5 days. He helps the kids with homework,
gets them dinner, has completely redone the house himself. So you
can see that he is status driven, she is career driven.
The situation recently deteriorated and SHE left HIM!!She also left
him with the kids saying that he is a better a father/mother than
she is mother. The kids are devestated to say the least. She told
her son that she didn't love his father anymore and that theywould
never live together as a family again. She told him that she was
happier now (Without the kids???) than she has been in years and
he (at 10 years old) had to learn to deal with the situation. He
also has developmental learning problems (very slow).
At this point, she is dating her boss (has been for a couple years
it now appears) and he is dating the ex-wife of a raquetball partner
(she is playboy centerfold in appearance, also smart) and the kids
are often left alone in the house for hours and alone overnight.
I guess what I'm saying is that if you choose partnership for yourself,
what happens to the kids?? My heart is breaking for these two.
I wouldn't give up either my wife or my kids. There's no situation
that under normal or even some abnormal conditions that could force
that upon me.
Ken
|
304.27 | one womans opinion | WATNEY::SPARROW | MYTHing person | Fri Nov 18 1988 11:22 | 14 |
| I was in the situation of having to choose. it was my husband
and his drugs and booze and his friends, did I want to live
with him and have my daughter exposed to him and his. did I want
to expend energy trying to assist him in seeing what he was doing
to himself and us? did I want to constantly risk being arrested
because I didn't turn him in? did I want to explain over and over
again to my daughter why dad acted the way he did?
nope, we moved out. and now and till my daughter makes her own
life, she will come first. any man in my life has to understand
that. if they should ever jepordize my daughter or hurt her or
expose her to drugs, they are gone. simple to me.
vivian
|
304.28 | Kids first now | COMET::PAPA | I'm the NRA | Sat Nov 19 1988 22:02 | 4 |
| At one time it was my wife that would have, and did, come first
but now since my divorce the kids will always come first. You
cant depend on a partner to be their always. But the kids will
always be their.
|
304.29 | | USAT03::BENSON | Whining for Results! | Mon Nov 28 1988 16:34 | 9 |
| .0
If I had to choose between a "lover" or a "partner" and my kids
I would choose my child(ren) in a heartbeat.
If I had to choose between my wife and my child, I don't know who
I would choose.
jeff
|
304.30 | instinct | CSC32::DELKER | | Fri Dec 02 1988 21:34 | 19 |
| A woman has an instinct to protect her children. She does not have
an inborn instinct to protect a man. That might be one reason that
women can make the choice so quickly and clearly. The children
are dependent upon her, while the man is capable of taking care
of himself.
I can think of situations where a choice might have to be made
between a lover and children. For example, you're a single custodial
parent with a lover. (This reason may be far-fetched, but you
get the idea) One of your children has to move to another climate
for health reasons, and you have an ex or parents living in that
climate who are willing to let the child live with them, if you
decide not to move yourself. Your lover cannot move for job
reasons. You have child in point A and lover in point B. Do you
move to be with the child, or stay with the lover? Once the
relationship is established with the lover, that can be a tough
decision to make.
Paula
|
304.31 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Ad Astra | Sat Dec 03 1988 10:47 | 20 |
| Re: .30
Paula, you did not say this, but it could easily be inferred that
you don't think a man has an instinct to protect his children, given
the way you phrased your response. I'm curious to know if this
is in fact what you believe.
Re: all
Just about all the situations presented here where the parent would
"of course" choose their child have been cases where the "partner"
is casual, recent, uncommitted, or even abusive. That makes the
decision much easier. Perhaps it was my own interpretation, but I
took the original question as applying to a happy, long-standing
relationship between the mother and father of the child. In that
way, you have to seriously look at the difference, if any, between
the love of a child and the love of a spouse. Given the way I read
the question, I could not answer it.
Steve
|
304.32 | clarification | CSC32::DELKER | | Mon Dec 05 1988 11:09 | 16 |
| re .31
Steve, I would think that a man would have instincts to protect
both his children and his wife. Maybe that's why it
seems tougher for men to make that decision than women.
Women have a very strong instinct (usually) to protect
their offspring. (Look at some of the other mothers in
the animal kingdom - bears, etc. NEVER get between a mother
bear and her cubs!) I think there's more of a tendency
for a man to feel protective of his wife than vice-versa.
I also think that he has protective feelings toward his
children, but not being a man, I don't know how strong that
is (that is, if it gets as extreme as women's protective
feelings).
Paula
|
304.33 | happens a lot in real life... | PH4VAX::MCBRIDE | veni,vidi...2 out of 3 ain't bad! | Sun Feb 26 1989 13:29 | 24 |
| Not too long ago I was put in the postion to make this choice.
Significant pressure was applied by my second wife to skip town,
not pay the rather huge child support, and 'If you loved me you'd
give me your all' . After we were married, my two sons became persona
non grata in her /our home. She had two children of her own.
Personally, I have allways visualized the confusion a child would
have in a stresful situation like a serious traffic accident or
fire or the like. Children have no base of experience to draw on.
What they need to know about their parents is that they are loved.
Abandoning a child destroys that inner knowledge and breaks down
his confidence. I suppose a mate has a need to know where you stand
as well but, drawing on a larger base of experience, he/she will
survive without great emotional damage.
In my case, I tried every way I could to keep the situation form
exploding. I did not, howver stop visiting my children. I did
not ignore my financial responsibilities for child support and I
did not skip town. What I did end up being is a single parent again.
Not necessarily by my own choice.
Save the children.
Bob
|